Greater understanding of polycystic ovary syndrome
29 September 2015A new genetic study of over 200,000 women reveals the underlying mechanisms of polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as potential interventions.
Research
A new genetic study of over 200,000 women reveals the underlying mechanisms of polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as potential interventions.
Students at the University of Cambridge are to be offered free, eight-week mindfulness training to help build resilience against stress as part of a new...
An international study of nearly 70,000 women has identified more than forty regions of the human genome that are involved in governing at what age...
Anna Vignoles (Faculty of Education), together with colleagues at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and Harvard University, authors a study that finds women with degrees...
What to take to university is a question foremost in the minds of thousands of freshers up and down the country. Christopher Page’s latest book...
Hidden tumours that cause potentially fatal high blood pressure but lurk undetected in the body until pregnancy have been discovered by a Cambridge medical team.
The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge's connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. Here, Q is for Queen Bumblebee, one of the UK's...
New research shows male lizards are more likely than females to be attacked by predators because the bright colours they need to attract a mate...
He trained as a medical doctor in Syria and did a PhD at Cambridge in order to set up a cancer research unit in Aleppo....
New research shows beetles that received no care as larvae were less effective at raising a large brood as parents. Males paired with ‘low quality’...